Science, asked by omgames88, 21 days ago

1) Weight of an object on the earth =​

Answers

Answered by HotIndians
1

Answer:

Since g=9.80m/s2 g = 9.80 m/s 2 on Earth, the weight of a 1.00-kg object on Earth is 9.80 N: w=mg=(1.00kg)(9.80m/s2)=9.80N. w = m g = ( 1.00 kg ) ( 9.80 m/s 2 ) = 9.80 N . When the net external force on an object is its weight, we say that it is in free fall, that is, the only force acting on the object is gravity

Answered by litzSofil
1

Answer:

Since g=9.80m/s2 g = 9.80 m/s 2 on Earth, the weight of a 1.00-kg object on Earth is 9.80 N: w=mg=(1.00kg)(9.80m/s2)=9.80N. w = m g = ( 1.00 kg ) ( 9.80 m/s 2 ) = 9.80 N . When the net external force on an object is its weight, we say that it is in free fall, that is, the only force acting on the object is gravity.

Explanation:

The weight(w) of an object is the force of gravity on the object and may be defined as the mass (m) times the acceleration of gravity (g). Weight is a force, the SI unit of weight is Newton. Weight (F) = m x g.

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